Thursday, July 12, 2012

New foreclosure filings swell 27% in Chicago area


Foreclosure filings in seven Chicago-area counties swelled during June and the second quarter, keeping pressure on a local housing market trying hard to find a bottom.

Another 6,952 homes started the foreclosure process in Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will counties, RealtyTrac data showed. That's a 27 percent increase from June 2011 when initial filings of foreclosure in the seven counties totaled 5,485. The number declined from May 2012, when 7,595 homes entered foreclosure.

For the second quarter as a whole, 18,927 homes entered foreclosure in the seven counties. That compares with 14,704 homes in the first quarter and 16,676 properties in 2011's second quarter.

Meanwhile, the number of homes repossessed by banks, which more directly affects the housing market, totaled 8,941 in the second quarter, after 10,314 were repossessed in the first quarter. In the three months ended in June 2011, 5,861 homes were repossessed.

An increase in activity was both feared and expected, following a year-long slowdown in foreclosures because of various state and federal investigations into mortgage-servicing practices that became generally known as the robo-signing scandal.

Those investigations culminated in a $25 billion settlement announced in April with the five largest mortgage servicers, at which time most housing experts said they expected servicers to start moving foreclosure actions through a clogged pipeline.

"Lenders and servicers are slowly but surely catching up with the backlog of delinquent loans that under normal circumstances would have started the foreclosure process last year," said Brandon Moore, RealtyTrac's CEO.

"The increase in foreclosure starts in the first half of the year will likely translate into more short sales and bank repossessions in the second half of the year and into next year."

For the state as a whole during the first half of the year, foreclosure activity was 22 percent higher than a year, making Illinois one of the 20 states to post an increase from the first six months of 2011.

That heightened level of activity, and the downward pressure it is putting on the housing market, is one reason why Zillow earlier this week named the Chicago area the best market in the nation for homebuyers to find a bargain.

Foreclosures also continue to exert pressure on the number of Chicago-area homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages, meaning they owe more on their loans than the current value of the properties. On Thursday, housing data firm CoreLogic reported that 32.7 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage in the Chicago area were underwater in the first quarter, up from 30.4 percent in the fourth quarter.

Last month, real estate agents cheered May's $100 increase in the median price of a home sold in the Chicago area, but they and local housing economists want to see several months of improvement before they conclude that a recovery is underway.

Nationally, the RealtyTrac report noted that while bank repossessions decreased during the second quarter, 311,010 properties began the foreclosure process, a 9 percent increase from a year ago. It was the first time since 2009's fourth quarter that foreclosure starts recorded a year-over-year gain.

Posted by Bradford Miller Law, P.C.
A Law Firm Dedicated To Real Estate Law, Landlord Tenant Law, and Estate Planning
134 N. LaSalle, Suite 2250
Chicago, IL 60602
312-238-9298

Offering free legal representation to homeowners seeking a short sale

Key words: Chicago short sale attorney, Chicago landlord tenant law attorney, Chicago estate planning attorney, Chicago real estate attorney, Chicago real estate lawyer, Chicago building code violations, short sale attorney Chicago. This is intended to be advertising.  Please consult with an attorney before acting on any information given here.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Where is the housing market headed?


5 Projections of Where the Housing Market's Headed

Real estate markets across the country are inching their way to a slow recovery after bottoming out, according to several real estate economists who spoke at a forum hosted by the National Association of Real Estate Editors.
National Association of REALTORS®’ Chief Economist Lawrence Yun, Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries, and National Association of Home Builders Chief Economist David Crowe shared their views on the direction of the housing market during the forum.
"Last year was the worst year on record for [new] house sales, for 60 years of housing-sale info," Crowe said. 
But things are picking up, the economists note, despite several challenges still threatening that recovery. Yun says that appraisal issues are holding back up to 20 percent of home sales and that lenders’ tightened mortgage underwriting standards are likely holding back another 15 to 20 percent of potential home deals. 
Here are some of the economists’ forecasts: 
1. New-home market: The NAHB predicts a 19 percent increase in single-family housing starts this year over last (from 434,000 last year to a projected 516,000 this year).
2. Single-family rental market: This could be the next housing market bubble, Humphries warns. He expects this sector to cool as rental rates continue to increase and as home ownership looks more attractive to the public again. 
3. Distressed home sales: The percentage of distressed homes sales is projected to drop by 25 percent in 2012 and 15 percent in 2013, Yun says. 
4. Home price appreciation: Yun says it’s possible some markets may see a 10 percent rise in home-price appreciation next year due to an increase in demand, or a 60 to 70 percent increase in housing starts. Yun argues it won’t be both, however, but rather one or the other. He notes it greatly depends on whether lawmakers reach an agreement once again on the looming debt-ceiling deadline.
5. Home owners’ negative equity: About a third of home owners are underwater, owing more on their mortgage than their home is currently worth. As such, the housing recovery will likely be “stair stepped,” Humphries says. He says home owners with negative equity will gradually begin to list their homes as they see prices inch up, but when they do, that may temporarily swell the housing supply and cause a brief pause to the recovery. 
Source: “Economists: 2012 Marks the End of a Long Bottom,” Inman News (June 22, 2012)
Posted by Bradford Miller Law, P.C.
A Law Firm Dedicated To Real Estate Law, Landlord Tenant Law, and Estate Planning
134 N. LaSalle, Suite 2250
Chicago, IL 60602
312-238-9298

Offering free legal representation to homeowners seeking a short sale

Key words: Chicago short sale attorney, Chicago landlord tenant law attorney, Chicago estate planning attorney, Chicago real estate attorney, Chicago real estate lawyer, Chicago building code violations, short sale attorney Chicago. This is intended to be advertising.  Please consult with an attorney before acting on any information given here.